Toronto Star

Baseball: MLB launches experiment with having computers call strikes

- RONALD BLUM THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Get ready for strikes by robots.

No, overworked machines aren’t walking out in a labour protest.

Computers will be used for ball/strike calls starting April 28 in the independen­t Atlantic League, where the distance between home and first will be shortened by three inches. The ground between the mound and home plate will lengthen by about two feet for the second half of the season beginning July 12.

The 60-foot-six-inch distance between the front of the pitch- ing rubber and the back point of home plate has been standard since 1893, but Major League Baseball reached a three-year deal to experiment in the Atlantic League, an eight-team circuit that occasional­ly produces big leaguers. Infield defensive shifts will be limited. Pitchers there will have to get used to 62 feet, two inches this summer.

Plate umpires will wear ear- pieces and be informed of ball/ strike calls by a TrackMan computer system that uses Doppler radar. Umps will have the ability to override the computer, which considers a pitch a strike when the ball bounces and then crosses the zone. TrackMan also does not evaluate check swings.

“The beauty of baseball is that it’s not foolproof. You’ve got to hit a round ball with a cylindrica­l bat square, and then you’ve got to get it past people,” said Joe West, who umpired his first big league game in 1976. “The game is typically American. It’s always somebody else’s fault when they lose — and usually it’s us.”

MLB has evaluated its umpires since first starting to install a QuesTec system in 2001 that umpires initially criticized as being inaccurate. Questec was used at a maximum of 11 ballparks in 2008, its final year.

A PitchF/x system, a partnershi­p of MLB Advanced Media and Sportvisio­n, was the basis of evaluation­s from 200916, and the TrackMan system was tested during the final year of that span. TrackMan has been used to evaluate umpires since 2017.

West, who has umpired more than 5,000 big league games and is on track to break Bill Klem’s record in 2020, said the 2016 test was far from perfect.

“It missed 500 pitches in April, and when I say it missed 500 pitches, that didn’t mean they called them wrong. They didn’t call them at all,” he said.

In addition, bases will become 18-inch squares in the Atlantic League, up from the 15-inch squares that have been standard since 1877. That will in effect cut the distance from the front of home plate to the front of first base from 87 feet, nine inches to 87 feet, six inches. The 90-foot measuremen­t between bases is from the back of the plate to the back corner of first and third along the foul line.

 ??  ?? Veteran umpire Joe West isn’t sold on the merits of computers calling strikes.
Veteran umpire Joe West isn’t sold on the merits of computers calling strikes.

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